If you have a posterous site on Posterous.com, you may be wondering who visits your Posterous posts and who monitors your profile feeds. Follow these simple steps to install a posterous tracking script on your Posterous.com profile:

First, go to Mobile Tracker and sign up for a website statistics tracking account

Log in to your new MobileTracker account, go to "My Projects", click on "Add New Project", and select a tracker style

Select "Posterous" from the tracker type drop-down menu. Note that Posterous.com does not allow embedding JavaScript code. Therefore some features like keyword detection and referrer links will not work when tracking your posterous. All other MobileTracker functions will work as designed

Log in to Posterous.com and click on "Manage". If you are showing your default profile on this particular blog ( you probably are if you're not sure ), click on "Your Settings". Otherwise, find the profile configuration page for your site by going to your site's Settings and editing the Site Profile

Verify that the counter now shows up on your Posterous.com site and profile

If you are a premium MobileTracker user, you can follow this step to hide the tracker icon

so that it doesn't affect your website's appearance{FANCYLIST}

+ : A leading plus sign indicates that this word must be present in every object returned.

- : A leading minus sign indicates that this word must not be present in any row returned.

By default (when neither plus nor minus is specified) the word is optional, but the object that contain it will be rated higher.

< > : These two operators are used to change a word's contribution to the relevance value that is assigned to a row.

( ) : Parentheses are used to group words into subexpressions.

~ : A leading tilde acts as a negation operator, causing the word's contribution to the object relevance to be negative. It's useful for marking noise words. An object that contains such a word will be rated lower than others, but will not be excluded altogether, as it would be with the - operator.

* : An asterisk is the truncation operator. Unlike the other operators, it should be appended to the word, not prepended.

" : The phrase, that is enclosed in double quotes ", matches only objects that contain this phrase literally, as it was typed.